It was well known that NBC was considering not picking Scrubs up, and that the show would have moved to ABC if that had occurred. Speaking about the situation, Lawrence noted, "The nice thing for us was we weren't really on the bubble because Steve McPherson, who is now President of ABC, pretty much told us that he was going to put the show on ABC if we weren't on NBC." However, Lawrence added, "We really wanted to finish where we started. Part of the model of this show in modern economic times is to be cost-effective, and our show only costs $2 million an episode, and it's been on for seven years. So NBC was nice enough to pony up the dough and let us finish up. Really all it came down to for us at the end was the choice of doing 22 episodes on a new network, or 18 episodes on the network we have been on for six years. It was an easy choice."

Braff was asked how it felt to be filming the final season of Scrubs this year and said, "I'm really excited. I think there's something really cool about knowing it's your last season. I mean so many times, by the time you get to the seventh season or what could be the last season, you don't know [for sure], and there's something really invigorating about going, 'All right. We've got 18 more.' I think it's really going to excite the crew and the cast. We've had almost the exact same entire crew for the entire run of the show, and you know, it's cheesy to say, but it is a total family because we have grown up with these people essentially. To go in for the final 18, knowing we're going out with a bang, and we're going out with the way Bill wants to end the show, I'm really, really excited to do it."

(L-R) Greg Garcia, Tina Fey, Lorne Michaels and Greg Daniels

Fey talked about the differences working on Saturday Night Live, where she was head writer, versus 30 Rock and said, "Well, the biggest difference is I'm a day shift now instead of night shift, which it took a lot of getting used to going to work at 5 o'clock in the morning instead of finishing work at 5 o'clock in the morning. I loved my time at SNL. But I was there for nine years, and I would now rather shoot a scene for seven hours where I'm pretending I'm about to write a sketch than to have to sit down and write a sketch. It was time to change it up."

Fey said that her character, Liz Lemon, "is sort of based on me and all of the lady writers that worked at SNL when I first started there. The biggest difference is that my character is not married, and also apparently her jugs were bigger."

The panel were asked how this current NBC Thursday night comedy lineup compared to those of the past, which have included classic series like The Cosby Show, Cheers, Seinfeld and Friends. Lawrence simply replied this current lineup "is better. I'm a TV junkie. I used to watch all of that. It used to be a s**t sandwich always. It used to be like three good shows and one giant piece of doo-doo. This is actually four good shows. Across the board, I don't think they've ever had four comedies in a row that were this solid on." Said Fey, "I agree with Bill. I used to see this giant, giant lineup with Cheers and Friends and Frasier and then they'd sneak a couple of the turkey burgers in between." Lawrence couldn't resist adding, "Caroline in the S**tty." Braff laughed, saying, "Like that won't get printed!"

Season 6 of Scrubs brought back the J.D./Elliot romance storyline, and Lawrence was asked why they decided to return to that element. Lawrence joked, "We've been on seven years. We're out of stories," before saying, "You know what, this show is not Sam and Diane, it's not Cheers. I always knew that. I think Greg [Daniels] deals with this burden a little bit, which is if I put any aspects of romantic comedy, the thing to fear as a producer is you know the promotions will be 'Will J.D. and Elliot&#Array;' and we didn't want to be that show. I think we're not that show. I think we got away from it, and I think it was an effective tool to end the year to have two dysfunctional people screw up their respective relationships."

With the end of Scrubs looming, Lawrence said, "What we're arguing about now amongst the writers is that we actually watch our fan base on the Internet; a bunch of websites about the show. People are pretty evenly divided on whether or not that couple ends up together or not. I happen to like The Sopranos finale. But the anger of people that weren't satisfied&#Array; Maybe I'm wrong to feel the sense of pressure. We're just going to try and, I don't want to say give the people what they want, but hopefully resolve the show in a way that people are satisfied if they want that couple to be together, and people are satisfied if they don't want them to be together."